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HOME | Definition of defamation (DEFAMATION, Defamation)


    Defamation \Def`a*ma"tion\, n. [OE. diffamacioun, F.
    diffamation. See Defame.]
    Act of injuring another's reputation by any slanderous
    communication, written or oral; the wrong of maliciously
    injuring the good name of another; slander; detraction;
    calumny; aspersion.
    [1913 Webster]

    Note: In modern usage, written defamation bears the title of
    libel, and oral defamation that of slander. --Burrill.
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    defamation
    n 1: a malicious attack [syn: calumny, obloquy, traducement,
    hatchet job]
    2: an abusive attack on a person's character or good name [syn:
    aspersion, calumny, slander, denigration]

    WordNet (r) 2.0


    24 Moby Thesaurus words for "defamation":
    attack, backbiting, backstabbing, belittlement, blackening,
    calumny, character assassination, defamation of character,
    defilement, denigration, depreciation, disparagement,
    malicious defamation, muckraking, mudslinging, name-calling,
    revilement, scandal, slander, smear, smear campaign, smear word,
    tale, vilification

    Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0


    DEFAMATION, tort. The speaking slanderous words of a person so as, de bona
    fama aliquid detrahere, to hurt his good fame. Vide Slander.
    2. In the United States, the remedy for defamation is by an action on
    the case, where the words are slanderous.
    3. In England, besides the remedy by action, proceedings may be
    instituted in the ecclesiastical court for redress of the injury. The
    punishment for defamation, in this court, is payment of costs and penance
    enjoined at the discretion of the judge. When the slander has been privately
    uttered, the penance may be ordered to be performed in a private place; when
    publicly uttered, the sentence must be public, as in the church of the
    parish of the defamed party, in time of divine service,, and the defamer may
    be required publicly to pronounce that by such words, naming them, as set
    forth in the sentence, he had defamed the plaintiff, and, therefore, that he
    begs pardon, first, of God, and then of the party defamed, for uttering such
    words. Clerk's Assist. 225; 3 Burn's Eccl. Law, Defamation, pl. 14; 2 Chit.
    Pr. 471 Cooke on Def.

    Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)




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